Title: Be in the Know
1Be in the Know!
- Screening For and Preventing
- Hospital Acquired Infections
2HAI Hospital Acquired Infection
- Definition An infection not present or
incubating prior to admittance to the hospital,
but generally occurring 72 hours after
admittance. - As of October 1st, 2008, Medicare will no longer
be reimbursing for HAIs.
3Patients at TG with an HAI
4Rate of HAIs on 6J
5Most Common types of HAI on 6J
6Most Common types of HAI on 6J
- UTIs and Wounds account for the most common types
of HAI. - Of all HAIs, at least 30 are present on
admission. - HAIs will cost thousands of dollars in lost
revenue, and cause extended LOS.
7Adjusted Incremental Profit/(Loss) by
source(baseline 3/06-9/06)
8/3/2009
7
8No way, Not 6J!
Yes way! 47 UTIs in 9 months!
Jan 1st, 2007-Sept 31st, 2007
9Be in the Know!
- A NIMs study from June 2007-August 2007 showed
that probably 38 of the HAIs for those months
were pre-existing. - Because infections caught within the first 48hrs
are not HAIs, we need to screen on admission for
UTI and wound infections.
10Be in the Know!
- Upon admission complete a thorough nursing
assessment. - For those patients with suspected UTI, collect
specimen, call MD for order, and send the culture
to the lab. - For those patients with wounds that look
infected, collect the specimen, call MD for an
order, and send the culture to the lab. - Positive culturesantibiotics soonerdischarge
fasterexcluded as an HAI.
11Assessing for wound infections
- Inspect the patient from top to bottom!
- Look for areas of redness, swelling, warmth,
pain, tenderness, and/or purulent drainage. - Does the patient have a fever?
- Patients often complain of having a spider bite
when it is actually MRSA!
12Assessing for UTIs
- Does patient complain of frequency, urgency, or
painful urination? - What does their urine look like?
- -Turbid?
- -Foul Smelling?
- -Bloody?
- Does the patient have a fever?
13Be in the Know!
- 5J tried this and look at their results
Intervention
14Be in the Know About UTIs
- Risks for UTI with an indwelling catheter
- Female gender
- Pt. with active infections or chronic conditions
- Improper position of drainage tubing and
collection bag. - Prolonged catheterization
- Other surprising facts
- UTIs have become an expected outcome in
catheterized patients. - Most frequent cause of sepsis.
- Urinary tract infections are the largest breeding
ground of antibiotic resistant organisms. - 11th leading cause of death in the U.S.
15Be in the Know Preventing UTIs
- According to the WHO, the 3 proven effective
measures against UTIs are - 1. Limit duration of catheter.
- 2. Aseptic technique at insertion.
- 3. Maintain closed drainage.
16Be in the Know Preventing UTIs
- A large perspective study monitored compliance
on a daily basis of catheter care and the only
violation predictive of an increased risk of UTI
was improper position of the drainage tube, above
the level of the bladder or sagging below the
level of the collection bag (Maki, 2001).
17Preventing InfectionHand Washing
- The main mode of transmission of MRSA is from
human hands. - Hand washing is the number one defense against
germs. - Be an advocate for your patient You washed your
hands, but did the M.D., OT, PT, RT, etc?
18Preventing InfectionStethoscopes
- In a study of 150 health care workers (50
paramedics, 50 nurses, and 50 doctors)
staphylococcus species were cultured from 89 of
participants stethoscopes. - Cleaning the stethoscopes diaphragm resulted in
an immediate reduction in the bacterial countby
94 with alcohol swabs. - The level of contamination rises from 0 to 69
after more than one day without cleaning of the
stethoscope. - (Saloojee Steenhoff, 2001)
19Conclusion
- While HAIs cost thousands of dollars to treat,
the bottom line is that reducing HAIs leads to
better patient outcomes.
20References
- Centers for Disease Control (2007, October 3).
MRSA in healthcare settings. Retrieved
February 24, 2008, from http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod
/dhqp/ar_MRSA_spotlight_2006.html - Ducel, G., Fabry, J., Nicolle, L. (2002).
Prevention of hospital acquired infections a
practical guide (2nd ed.). Geneva, Switzerland
WHO. - Easton, P. M., Sarma, A., Williams, F., Marwick,
C. A., Phillips, G., Nathwani, D. (2007).
Infection control and management of MRSA
assessing the knowledge of staff in an acute
hospital setting. Journal of Hospital Infection,
66, 29-33. - Neergaard, L. (2008, February 19). Medicare won't
pay hospital for errors. Retrieved February 23,
from http//www.theolympian.com/national/story/364
196.html - NIM (2007). nosocomial infection marker charts.
Unpublished raw data. - Peck, P. (2007, August 20). Medicare buck stops
at paying for hospital mistakes. Retrieved March
3, 2008, from http//www.medpagetoday/PublicHealt
hPolicy/MedicaidMedicare/tb/6457 - Saloojee, H., Steenhoff, A. (2001). The health
professional's role in preventing nosocomial
infections. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 77,
16-19.